Aiken Promotions said it would outline details on Wednesday on how people who had bought tickets could secure refunds.

Garth Brooks came to Croke Park in January to promote his summer concerts
Fans queued for tickets, with some camping out for several nights

About 400,000 fans had booked tickets for the five sold-out concerts, which were due to be staged from 25-29 July, but permission was only granted for shows on 25, 26 and 27 July.

'Legal threat'

Brooks said to chose which shows to play and which not to, would be "like asking to choose one child over another".

Timeline of events

December 2013: Garth Brooks announces he is returning to live performance, more than 10 years after he last hit the road. He announces two dates at Croke Park, the scene of previous huge concerts

30 January 2014: More than 200,000 tickets for three concerts sell out within two hours. The third date was added because of the huge demand for tickets, which saw some people camping out for several days

6 February: A fourth and a fifth date also sell out quickly

14 February: Residents who live near Croke Park say they are considering taking legal action against the organisers over the likely disruption

6 March: The GAA, which owns Croke Park, asks a mediator to intervene in the row with the residents who were objecting to the concerts

1 July: Amid increasing doubts about the concerts going ahead, Dublin City Council says it has received about 370 submissions from residents, businesses and other interested parties while it considers the event licence application, which, it says, was lodged on 17 April

3 July: The council grants permission for only three out of the five planned concerts - Brooks says he will either put on all five or none at all

8 July: The promoter says all five concerts have been cancelled

Residents who live near Croke Park, the GAA (Gaelic Athletic Association) stadium in north Dublin, where the concerts were due to be held had threatened legal action after the initial two concerts were increased to five because of unprecedented demand.

They claimed they were not consulted before the organisers announced the shows or put the tickets on sale.

The council said that granting all five concerts, following on from three by One Direction in May, would have doubled the previous maximum number of concerts held at Croke Park per year.

The GAA had an agreement with residents that a maximum of three concerts would be held each year in the sports venue.

The council said 373 submissions had been received from residents, residents' groups and local businesses.

The promoters lodged an application for a licence to stage all five shows on 17 April despite not having secured formal permission from the council.

This is not an unusual practice in the Republic of Ireland, but the controversy over the Garth Brooks concerts has brought the issue into the spotlight.

Taoiseach (Irish prime minister) Enda Kenny said the cancellation of the concerts was damaging to the country.

Speaking in the Dáil (Irish parliament), Mr Kenny said the entire episode had been very badly handled.

On Monday, Dublin City councillors backed a motion calling for the five concerts to go ahead.

Lost revenue

Lord Mayor Christy Burke said three days of talks with promoter Peter Aiken, the GAA and mediator Kieran Mulvey had failed to find a solution.

The chief executive of Dublin Chamber of Commerce, Gina Quin, estimated that the lost revenue to businesses in Dublin if none of the concerts went ahead would be 50m euros (£39.7m).

She said the problem lay in the planning process when it came to applying for concerts.

"These tickets were sold in February, the planning wasn't applied for until April, the decision wasn't made on that planning process, because it needs to go through due regard to allow people to appeal and put in objections, until last Thursday to only allow three of the five concerts to go ahead and that's simply too late," she said.

Garth Brooks is one of America's most famous country stars with a career that has seen him become one of the best-selling artists of all time.

Garth Brooks is one of America's most famous country stars with a career that has seen him become one of the best-selling artists of all time